This appears to be a request for a tracklist or metadata typically associated with a high-quality (FLAC) digital discography collection for the iconic British rock band

  1. “You Really Got Me” (Original Mono FLAC) – Listen for the razor-cut guitar transient.
  2. “Sunny Afternoon” (Stereo FLAC) – The double bass and baritone sax should have zero bleed.
  3. “Shangri-La” (From Arthur, 24-bit FLAC) – The dynamic shift from quiet verse to crashing chorus will test your speakers’ range.
  4. “Celluloid Heroes” (Live from Show-Biz, FLAC) – Hear the crowd ambiance naturally fade around the stage monitors.
  • The -PMEDIA- tag is not a label. It’s a marker of technique. There are PMEDIA rips from CD (usually Japanese SHM-CD) and PMEDIA rips from vinyl. Vinyl is preferred, but CD-sourced 1970 albums > vinyl from a worn stamp.
  • Missing albums: Some PMEDIA sets omit Soap Opera (1975) or Preservation Acts 1 & 2 due to poor original pressings. This is intentional—if the vinyl has inner groove distortion, they won’t share it.
  • The "Pye Master Tapes" tragedy: Most master tapes for 1966–1970 were wiped or degraded. PMEDIA often resorts to needle drops from mint UK pressings—legally gray, sonically glorious.

legally purchased in FLAC format

The Kinks’ music is protected by copyright (Pye/ARista/Konk/BMG/Sony/Universal). Downloading unauthorized FLAC rips from public trackers violates those rights. However, many of the albums listed above can be from:

This is the "Golden Age" of the band, where they transitioned from garage rock to sophisticated social commentary.

"The Kinks - Discography -FLAC Songs- -PMEDIA-."

The year was 1978, and for Arthur, music wasn't just sound—it was a physical archive. His small London flat was a fortress of vinyl, but his latest obsession was a digital ghost. He had just finished downloading a massive, elusive folder:

FLAC

The Kinks' discography is a vast landscape of British rock and pop, spanning from their 1964 debut to their final studio efforts in the mid-90s. For audiophiles and collectors looking for high-fidelity versions, the best results often come from recent remasters or specialty audiophile labels. The Kinks Discography Guide 1. The Golden Era (1966–1971)